Show Sidebar Log in
  • Home
  • About Us
    • News
    • Admin
  • Journal
    • About JFSR
    • People
    • Awards
    • Features
    • Volumes
    • Subscriptions
    • Submissions
    • Advertising
    • Call for Papers for a Special Issue
  • Blog
    • About the FSR Blog
    • People
    • Submissions
    • @theTable
    • Open Calls
    • Call for Submissions: At the Table: Embodiment, Survival, and Collective Care
  • Books
    • All Titles
    • About FSR Books
    • FSR Bookstore
  • LAB
    • About LAB
    • People
    • Feminists Talk Religion Podcast
  • Across Generations
    • Description
    • Process
    • Video Projects
  • Donate
  • Call for Submissions: At the Table: Embodiment, Survival, and Collective Care

From Survival to Respect: The Narrative Performances and Ritual Authority of a Female Hindu Healer

Volume 29 Number 1
Author(s):
Amy L. Allocco
Abstract:

This essay argues that through narrative performance, Valliyammal, a female Hindu healer from South India, earns respect (matippu or mariyatai ), creates and maintains her ritual authority in both her domestic shrine and in public temple spaces, and legitimates her unusual religious leadership role. Valliyammal's life stories constitute one discursive strategy to establish her identity as a now-single woman whose "call" to serve the Goddess demanded choosing the deity over her husband and thus entailed celibacy, which in turn has intensified her power (cakti ) and facilitated her ritual knowledge. As a professional ritual healer, Valliyammal inhabits what has traditionally been a male role, and from this vantage point, she negotiates normative gender expectations, extends gender boundaries, and ultimately embodies something of an alternative gender ideology. Importantly, in addition to authorizing new models of selfhood, Valliyammal's narratives and ritual performances also produce the conditions for her economic independence and, thus, her sustenance.

DOI: 10.2979/jfemistudreli.29.1.101

Stable URL: http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2979/jfemistudreli.29.1.101

 

Back to Volume 29, Number 1

Recent Blog Posts

  • The Repeated Violations of Ahlaya and the Perpetuation of Hegemonic Revisionism

    April 4, 2026
  • From Ancient Gleaning to Modern Hunger: Ruth, SNAP Cuts, and a TikTok Test of Faith

    April 1, 2026
  • The spiritual ecology of Indian Himalayan women: Ritual, resistance, and relationality

    December 15, 2025
  • Thresholds of Becoming: A Reflection on Pedagogy, Poetic Theology, and What Comes Next

    October 24, 2025
  • “Siembra,” Mark 4:3-8, #Markseries, @thetable

    October 17, 2025

Recent JFSR Articles

  • The Hell You Say

    July 29, 2025
  • Apocalyptic Disappointment

    July 29, 2025
  • We Will Not Surrender

    July 29, 2025

@theTable Blog Series

FSR Summer Book Club

Racism and the Feminist Study of Religion

Manthologies

Parenting in the Field

Planetary Solidarity

Transcending Transphobia

Intersecting Islamophobia

Feminism Online

Contact Us

Managing Office: [email protected]

Journal Office: [email protected]

Blog Office: [email protected]

>> More Contacts

Copyright 2015 © Feminist Studies in Religion, Inc.
All rights reserved. Direct questions to [email protected]

Login